Reputation: 20557
I am running MVC 4 on my server and to save a bit of data for my users I figured I would enable GZip encoding, to do this I simply used:
(C#)
Response.AddHeader("Content-Encoding", "gzip");
Response.Filter = new GZipStream(Response.Filter, CompressionMode.Compress);
In my android application I use:
(Java)
String response = "";
DefaultHttpClient client = new DefaultHttpClient();
HttpGet httpGet = new HttpGet(url);
try {
HttpResponse execute = client.execute(httpGet);
InputStream content = execute.getEntity().getContent();
BufferedReader buffer = new BufferedReader(
new InputStreamReader(content));
String s = "";
while ((s = buffer.readLine()) != null) {
response += s;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return response;
When I use GZip the Java code nuts out and causes GC to run, I was never patient enough to wait for it to return.
When I took off GZip from the server it ran perfectly fine. The function to get the response returns straight away with no problem.
I tried adding this to the java code:
httpGet.addHeader("Accept-Encoding", "gzip");
With no success.
Question is, is there something I'm not getting? Can I not put the response in a stream if it is using GZip? Am I meant to use the stream and uncompress it after?
What am I doing wrong?
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1263
Reputation: 5315
Instead of using
DefaultHttpClient client = new DefaultHttpClient();
you can use
ContentEncodingHttpClient client = new ContentEncodingHttpClient();
which is a subclass of DefaultHttpClient
and supports GZIP content.
You need Apache HttpClient 4.1 for this.
If you have Apache HttpClient 4.2, you should use
DecompressingHttpClient client = new DecompressingHttpClient();
if you have Apache HttpClient 4.3, you should use the HttpClientBuilder
Upvotes: 2